Assuming Selberg's orthonormality conjecture and following http://mathoverflow.net/questions/50581/automorphisms-of-the-selberg-class, I define automorphisms of the Selberg class $\mathcal{S}$ as bijective maps $f$ from $\mathcal{S}$ to itself such that: 1) $f$ maps a primitive function of $\mathcal{S}$ to a primitive function of $\mathcal{S}$, 2) $f$ maps a function of degree $d$ to a function of degree $d$, 3) for every $F$ in $\mathcal{S}$, $n_{f(F)}=n_F$, where $n_F $is the integer involved in Selberg's conjecture A, 4) if $F=F_{1}^{e_1}.F_{2}^{e_2}.F_{k}^{e_k}$, then $f(F)=f(F_1)^{e_1}.f(F_2)^{e_2}....f(F_k)^{e_k}$ (so that $f$ is "completely multiplicative"). The set of all such maps forms a group $Aut(\mathcal{S})$ under composition, the structure of which has been determined by Denis Chaperon de Lauzières in the link given above. Now let $F$ be an element of $\mathcal{S}$ and let's define $G_{F}$ as the subgroup of $Aut(\mathcal{S})$ whose every element preserves $F$. Is it true that $F$ is a primitive element of $\mathcal{S}$ of degree $d$ if and only if there exists a vector space $V$ and a group morphism $\rho: G_{F}\to GL(V)$ such that $(V,\rho)$ is an irreducible representation of $G_{F}$ of degree $d$? Thanks in advance.